Luke 18:9-14
Falling into God’s Love
James Sledge October
23, 2016
Many
years ago, I preached a sermon from today’s gospel reading where a couple of
members helped me do a dramatic reading of the parable with just a little
updating. The Pharisee became an upstanding church member and the tax collector
was a drug dealer. The first change is obvious. Pharisees were the upstanding
Protestants of their day. The second change perhaps needs more explanation.
Tax
collectors in Jesus’ time were not civil service employees. They were part of a
bizarre, corrupt system that permitted tax collectors to pry as much money as
they could from those in their community. The Romans did not care how much they
collected as long as Rome got the prescribed amount. Tax collectors could keep
everything else for themselves. Tax collectors often used intimidation and
threats to get as much as they could, often preying on the most vulnerable in
society. And they became wealthy while helping out an occupying, foreign power.
They made modern slum lords look charitable by comparison, and they were
rightly despised.
And
so in church that Sunday years ago, an upstanding church member thanked God that
he was not like robbers and thieves and other sorts of low life. He certainly
wasn’t anything like a drug dealer. He tithed and then some to his church. He
served on committees and session and never missed a worship service if he was
in town.
The
drug dealer didn’t dare come up to the front of the church. He stayed off to
the side and never looked up. He pulled at his clothes and hair as he said,
“God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” And you’ve already heard the parable so you
know what Jesus said next.
A
few days later, I got a letter (email was still fairly new) from a church
members not at all happy with my sermon. Who would keep the church running, or
pay my salary, he asked, if not upstanding church members like the one I had
substituted for the Pharisee? It certainly wasn’t going to be drug dealers or
others of that ilk.